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Prof. John M Essigmann
Professor of Toxicology and Biological Engineering
Professor of Chemistry
Primary DLC
Department of Biological Engineering
MIT Room:
56-669
(617) 253-6227
jessig@mit.edu
https://chemistry.mit.edu/profile/john-m-essigmann/
Assistant
Kerry Forristall
(617) 253-6224
kerryf@mit.edu
Areas of Interest and Expertise
Genetic Toxicology and Oncology
Biochemistry
Mutagenesis
DNA - Repair Enzymes and Their Adducts
Anti-Tumor Drug Action
Structural Basis for Mutagenesis by Radiation and Chemical Carcinogens
Characterization of Structural Intermediates Produced During the Removal of Chemical Adducts from DNA
Investigations on the Mechanisms of Action of cis-Platin, (Cancer Chemotherapeutic Agent)
Design of Recombinant Plasmids for Mutagenesis Studies
Therapeutics Development and Delivery
Environmental and Endogenous Chemicals
Genetic Diseases and Diagnostics
Biological Chemistry
Toxicology and Epidemiology
Carcinogenesis
Mechanism-Based Drug Design
Toxicogenomics Research Consortium
Molecular Pharmacology
Biological Oceanography
Research Summary
Professor Essigmann's research focuses on how cells respond to DNA damaging agents. When cells are exposed to radiation, certain chemicals (including nearly all carcinogens) and some antitumor agents, the normal nucleotides of the genome become chemically altered to form covalent adducts. John Essigmann's research focuses on how repair enzymes remove structural damage from DNA and on how the adducts that evade repair either kill cells or induce mutations and cancer. Studies on mutagenesis typically start with the synthesis of an oligonucleotide containing a DNA adduct that has not been studied before from the biological perspective. Recombinant DNA techniques are then used to insert the modified oligonucleotide into the genome of a virus at a preselected site. The modified genome is then introduced into cells, where the DNA replication and repair systems act upon the single DNA adduct. Progeny DNA molecules are isolated, and the appropriate area of the genome is sequenced in order to establish the nature and frequency of the mutation(s) induced.
Work on the mechanisms of antitumor drug action focuses in part on cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (cisplatin), which binds to DNA to form adducts that block the enzymes associated with tumor cell DNA replication and transcription. We discovered that the transcription factor hUBF, which controls rRNA production, binds tightly to the major DNA adduct of cisplatin. The Kd of this association is in the pM range, which is within threefold of the binding affinity of hUBF for the rRNA promoter. Current efforts are aimed at establishing whether cisplatin adducts act as decoys that disrupt transcription of the rRNA gene and other genes regulated by related transcription factors.
The third area of research in the Essigmann laboratory concerns the synthesis of programmable therapeutics. Bifunctional molecules are being prepared in which a DNA damaging warhead is linked to a molecular recognition domain for proteins that are over expressed in tumors (e.g., steroid receptors). Following DNA damage, the molecular recognition domain attracts the over expressed nuclear proteins. The formation of the protein-adduct complex sterically hinders the repair of the adduct, causing the adduct to persist and enhancing the likelihood that it will kill the cell. In non-tumor cells, adduct repair is rapid and hence those cells suffer less toxicity. Molecules have also been designed to alter the ability of specific transcription factors to function normally. In cancer cells, many transcription factors are over expressed and they are therefore targets for this therapeutic strategy. Because the protein recognition domain can be tailored to attract many different tumor specific proteins, the general approach has been termed "fatal engineering." Out of these efforts, molecules that have shown promise in vivo against breast and prostate cancer have been evolved. The one developed against prostate cancers is of particular interest because it circumvents that apoptotic blockade that typically protects prostate cancer cells from therapeutic alkylating agents.
Recent Work
Projects
October 6, 2016
Department of Biological Engineering
Intra and Extra-Chromosomal Probes for Mutagenesis by Carcinogens
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
September 9, 2015
Department of Biological Engineering
Developing Solutions for Human and Environmental Health Risks Created by Exponentially Increasing Exposures to Lanthanide Metals
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
May 20, 2015
Department of Biological Engineering
Chemical Mechanism of Mutation During Inflammation-Induced Carcinogenesis
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
September 17, 2013
Department of Biological Engineering
Design of Programmable Antitumor Drugs: Fatal Engineering
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
September 17, 2013
Department of Biological Engineering
Site Specific Mutagenesis by DNA Adducts
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
December 6, 2012
Department of Biological Engineering
Essigmann Laboratory
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
December 6, 2012
Department of Biological Engineering
Cellular Responses to DNA Damage
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
September 10, 2009
Department of Biological Engineering
The Environment as a Variable to Calibrate Mouse Models of Human Disease
Principal Investigator
John Essigmann
Related Faculty
Prof. Timothy K Lu
Research Affiliate
Fei Chen
Research Affiliate
Dr. Rahul Raman
Research Scientist